#jan petah
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i'd like to apologise to matti myllyaho for the stupidest video i've ever made in my life
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⚠️ DON’T START DISCOURSE ABOUT RPF IN THE NOTES!! YOU WILL BE BLOCKED IF YOU DO SO ⚠️
Do you ship it?
Reason:
“they are literally giving each other the biggest heart eyes i have ever seen constantly, its almost concerning”
edit: it’s Jan peteh sorry gang. add one to the list of typos
#do you ship this rpf ship#rpf#real person fiction#rps#real person shipping#shipping#shipping poll#jan peteh#nace jordan#jance#joker out#guitarists#bassists#bands
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#joker out#poll#not a quote#meme#jan peteh#janace#jance#nace x jan#nace jordan#kris gustin#jure maček#bojan cvjetićanin
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Artificial cornea restores patient’s vision An artificial cornea developed by an Israeli company has been successfully implanted in the eye of a man who lost his sight a decade ago.
According to a release by CorNeat Vision, the 78-year-old patient regained his vision after the CorNeat KPro device was implanted into the eye.
The company said the implant replaces deformed, scarred or opacified corneas as it melds with the eye wall. The device is designed to integrate with ocular tissue using a patented synthetic non-degradable nanofabric skirt, which is placed under the conjunctiva.
The procedure was performed Jan. 11 by Professor Irit Bahar, the head of the ophthalmology department at Rabin Medical Center in Petah Tikva, Israel.
Following the procedure, the company reported that the patient was able to recognize his family and read words.
“The moment we took off the bandages was emotional and significant,” Dr. Bahar said in a statement. “Moments like these are the fulfillment of our calling as doctors. We are proud of being at the forefront of this exciting and meaningful project which will undoubtedly impact the lives of millions.”
In 2020, CorNeat Vision was granted approval to move forward with clinical trials of the artificial cornea on 10 patients who had corneal blindness.
Gilad Litvin, MD, CorNeat Vision's co-founder, chief medical officer, and the inventor of the CorNeat KPro, said in a statement that being in the room with the patient was a “surreal” experience.
"After years of hard work, seeing a colleague implant the CorNeat KPro with ease and witnessing a fellow human being regain his sight the following day was electrifying and emotionally moving, there were a lot of tears in the room,” Dr. Litvin said in the statement. “This is an extremely important milestone for CorNeat Vision, key in our journey to enable people around the world to fully enjoy their vision potential."
Almog Aley-Raz, CorNeat Vision's co-founder, CEO and vice president of research and development, noted in the statement that the implantation is the first step in a multi-national clinical trial, geared toward attaining CE Mark, FDA clearance and China NMPA approval.
Aley-Raz noted that a total of 10 patients are approved for the trial at Rabin Medical Center in Israel with 2 additional sites planned to open this January in Canada and 6 others at different stages in the approval process in France, the United States, and the Netherlands.
“Our first trial includes blind patients who are not suitable candidates for- or have failed one or more corneal transplantations,” Aley-Raz said in the statement. “Given the visual performance of our device, the expected healing time and retention, and the fact that it cannot carry disease, we plan to initiate a second study later this year with broader indications to approve our artificial cornea as a first line treatment, displacing the use of donor tissue used in full thickness corneal transplantations."
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KAMROOZ ARAM
on the ancient arts of Iran
Achaemenid (Iran, Susa). Bricks with a palmette motif, ca. 6th–4th century B.C. Ceramic, glaze. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund, 1948 (48.98.20a–c)
The Artist Project
Vito Acconci on Gerrit Rietveld's Zig Zag Stoel
Ann Agee on the Villeroy Harlequin Family
Diana Al-Hadid on the cubiculum from the villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale
Ghada Amer on an Iranian tile panel, Garden Gathering
Kamrooz Aram on the ancient arts of Iran
Cory Arcangel on the harpsichord
John Baldessari on Philip Guston's Stationary Figure
Barry X Ball on an Egyptian fragment of a queen’s face
Ali Banisadr on Hieronymus Bosch's The Adoration of the Magi
Dia Batal on a Syrian tile panel with calligraphic inscription
Zoe Beloff on Édouard Manet's Civil War (Guerre Civile)
Dawoud Bey on Roy DeCarava
Nayland Blake on boli
Barbara Bloom on Vilhelm Hammershøi's Moonlight, Strandgade 30
Andrea Bowers on Howardena Pindell
Mark Bradford on Clyfford Still
Cecily Brown on medieval sculptures of the Madonna and Child
Luis Camnitzer on Giovanni Battista Piranesi's etchings
Nick Cave on Kuba cloths
Alejandro Cesarco on Gallery 907
Enrique Chagoya on Goya's Los Caprichos
Roz Chast on Italian Renaissance painting
Willie Cole on Ci Wara sculpture
George Condo on Claude Monet's The Path through the Irises
Petah Coyne on a Japanese outer robe with Mount Hōrai
Njideka Akunyili CROSBY on Georges Seurat's Embroidery; The Artist's Mother
John Currin on Ludovico Carracci's The Lamentation
Moyra Davey on a rosary terminal bead with lovers and Death's head
Edmund de Waal on an ewer in the shape of a Tibetan monk's cap
Thomas Demand on the Gubbio studiolo
Jacob El Hanani on the Mishneh Torah, by Master of the Barbo Missal
Teresita Fernández on Precolumbian gold
Spencer Finch on William Michael Harnett's The Artist's Letter Rack
Eric Fischl on Max Beckmann's Beginning
Roland Flexner on Jacques de Gheyn II's Vanitas Still Life
Walton Ford on Jan van Eyck and workshop's The Last Judgment
Natalie Frank on Käthe Kollwitz
LaToya Ruby FRAZIER on Gordon Parks's Red Jackson
Suzan Frecon on Duccio di Buoninsegna's Madonna and Child
Adam Fuss on a marble grave stele of a little girl
Maureen Gallace on Paul Cézanne's still life paintings with apples
Jeffrey Gibson on Vanuatu slit gongs
Nan Goldin on Julia Margaret Cameron
Wenda Gu on Robert Motherwell's Lyric Suite
Ann Hamilton on a Bamana marionette
Jane Hammond on snapshots and vernacular photography
Zarina Hashmi on Arabic calligraphy
Sheila Hicks on The Organ of Mary, a prayer book by Ethiopian scribe Baselyos
Rashid Johnson on Robert Frank
Y.Z. Kami on Egyptian mummy portraits
Deborah Kass on Athenian vases
Nina Katchadourian on Early Netherlandish portraiture
Alex Katz on Franz Kline's Black, White, and Gray
Jeff Koons on Roman sculpture
An-My Lê on Eugène Atget's Cuisine
Il Lee on Rembrandt van Rijn's portraits
Lee Mingwei on Chinese ceremonial robes
Lee Ufan on the Moon Jar
Glenn Ligon on The Great Bieri
Lin Tianmiao on Alex Katz's Black and Brown Blouse
Kalup Linzy on Édouard Manet
Robert Longo on Jackson Pollock's Autumn Rhythm (Number 30)
Nicola López on works on paper
Nalini Malani on Hanuman Bearing the Mountaintop with Medicinal Herbs
Kerry James MARSHALL on Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres's Odalisque in Grisaille
Josiah McElheny on Horace Pippin
Laura McPhee on Pieter Bruegel the Elder's The Harvesters
Josephine Meckseper on George Tooker's Government Bureau
Julie Mehretu on Velázquez's Juan de Pareja
Alexander Melamid on Ernest Meissonier's 1807, Friedland
Mariko Mori on Botticelli's The Annunciation
Vik Muniz on The Henry R. Luce Center for the Study of American Art
Wangechi Mutu on Egon Schiele
James Nares on Chinese calligraphy
Catherine Opie on the Louis XIV bedroom
Cornelia Parker on Robert Capa's The Falling Soldier
Izhar Patkin on Shiva as Lord of Dance
Sheila Pepe on European armor
Raymond Pettibon on Joseph Mallord William Turner
Sopheap Pich on Vincent van Gogh's drawings
Robert Polidori on Jules Bastien-Lepage's Joan of Arc
Rona Pondick on Egyptian sculpture fragments
Liliana Porter on Jacometto's Portrait of a Young Man
Wilfredo Prieto on Auguste Rodin's sculptures
Rashid Rana on Umberto Boccioni's Unique Forms of Continuity in Space
Krishna Reddy on Henry Moore
Matthew Ritchie on The Triumph of Fame over Death
Dorothea Rockburne on an ancient Near Eastern head of a ruler
Alexis Rockman on Martin Johnson Heade's Hummingbird and Passionflowers
Annabeth Rosen on ceramic deer figurines
Martha Rosler on The Met Cloisters
Tom Sachs on the Shaker Retiring Room
David Salle on Marsden Hartley
Carolee Schneemann on Cycladic female figures
Dana Schutz on Balthus's The Mountain
Arlene Shechet on a bronze statuette of a veiled and masked dancer
James Siena on the Buddha of Medicine Bhaishajyaguru
Katrín Sigurdardóttir on the Hôtel de Cabris, Grasse
Shahzia Sikander on Persian miniature painting
Joan Snyder on Florine Stettheimer's Cathedrals paintings
Pat Steir on the Kongo Power Figure
Thomas Struth on Chinese Buddhist sculpture
Hiroshi Sugimoto on Bamboo in the Four Seasons, attributed to Tosa Mitsunobu
Eve Sussman on William Eggleston
Swoon on Honoré Daumier's The Third-Class Carriage
Sarah Sze on the Tomb of Perneb
Paul Tazewell on Anthony van Dyck's portraits
Wayne Thiebaud on Rosa Bonheur's The Horse Fair
Hank Willis THOMAS on a daguerreotype button
Mickalene Thomas on Seydou Keïta
Fred Tomaselli on Guru Dragpo
Jacques Villeglé on Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso
Mary Weatherford on Goya's Manuel Osorio Manrique de Zuñiga
William Wegman on Walker Evans's postcard collection
Kehinde Wiley on John Singer Sargent
Betty Woodman on a Minoan terracotta larnax
Xu Bing on Jean-François Millet's Haystacks: Autumn
Dustin Yellin on ancient Near Eastern cylinder seals
Lisa Yuskavage on Édouard Vuillard's The Green Interior
Zhang Xiaogang on El Greco's The Vision of Saint John
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Tier-1 Mobile Network Carrier in Japan Expanding Their 4G Cellular Network with Gilat's Backhaul over Satellite
Tier-1 Mobile Network Carrier in Japan Expanding Their 4G Cellular Network with Gilat’s Backhaul over Satellite
PETAH TIKVA, Israel, Jan. 06, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Gilat Satellite Networks Ltd. (Nasdaq: GILT, TASE: GILT), a worldwide leader in satellite networking technology, solutions, and services, announced today it has received an order for additional VSATs from its Tier-1 mobile network carrier customer in Japan. Using Gilat’s unique SkyEdge II-c cellular backhaul system, the mobile network carrier…
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Teridion Selected for Upcoming Speaking Engagements to Address Growing Interest in SLA-backed MPLS Alternatives and SaaS Acceleration
Check out the latest post http://thenewsrabbit.com/teridion-selected-for-upcoming-speaking-engagements-to-address-growing-interest-in-sla-backed-mpls-alternatives-and-saas-acceleration/
SAN FRANCISCO–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Teridion, the company delivering a public cloud-based WAN service backed by a carrier grade SLA, today announced that it will present on strategies for improved and reliable content and application delivery at important industry events this week.
Teridion delivers Teridion for Enterprise, the industry’s first and only public cloud-based WAN solution to deliver the SLA-backed performance and reliability of legacy WAN technologies such as multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) with the agility, elastic scale, and global reach of the public cloud. Teridion’s cloud-based WAN service runs atop 25+ leading public cloud providers, leveraging the global reach and elastic scalability of the public cloud. Teridion’s cloud-based WAN service is powered by Teridion Curated Routing, an innovative approach to routing that draws on the power of deep learning to radically improve distributed routing.
On Jan. 30, Teridion Vice President of Products and Marketing Pejman Roshan will participate in the following events co-located together:
IT EXPO – where he will present “If the Cloud is the New Data Center, the Internet is the New LAN” at 9 am EST in Room 209 at the Broward County Convention Center in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
SD-WAN Expo – where he will present “The Promise of Application Performance” at noon EST in Room 315 at the Broward County Convention Center in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
About Pejman Roshan
Pejman Roshan is the Vice President of Products and Marketing for Teridion, Inc. Prior to Teridion he ran product management for Aruba’s Cloud Services business unit, responsible for delivery of Aruba’s cloud networking offering, Aruba Central. Mr. Roshan joined Aruba from ShoreTel, where he was the vice president of product management, responsible for ShoreTel’s cloud and on-premises unified communications product lines. He joined ShoreTel with ShoreTel’s acquisition of Agito Networks, where he was the co-founder and chief marketing officer. Before founding Agito, Mr. Roshan held various product management and leadership roles in Cisco Systems Wireless Networking Business Unit.
Mr. Roshan’s accomplishments include authoring several protocol and design patents. He was very active with 802.11 wireless LANs, participating in the IEEE 802.11 task groups responsible for security (802.11i) and QoS (802.11e) and co-authoring “802.11 Wireless LAN Fundamentals,” published by Cisco Press in 2004. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from California Polytechnic (Cal Poly) University.
About Teridion
Companies depend more and more on the Internet as a primary means of networking, including application delivery and wide area networking. The challenge is that the Internet is not designed to deliver these services with the performance that users expect. Teridion enables faster and more reliable Internet with Teridion Curated Routing, radically improving Internet performance up to 2X – 20X, anywhere in the world. Teridion for Enterprise combines the performance, reliability, and SLAs of legacy WAN technologies such as MPLS with the agility and elastic scalability of the cloud. The company is backed by leading venture investors including Jerusalem Venture Partners, Magma Venture Partners and Singtel Innov8, and is relied on by leading SaaS providers such as Atlassian, Box, Egnyte, Merrill Corp., and many others. Teridion is headquartered in San Francisco, with international offices in Petah Tikva, Israel. For more information, visit www.teridion.com or email [email protected].
Teridion is a registered trademark of Teridion in the United States and other countries. All rights reserved. All other company and product names are either trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.
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Is Ivanka Trump Jewish? In Israel, she has a trump card
AP, Jan. 26, 2017
PETAH TIKVA, Israel (AP)--Is Ivanka Trump really Jewish?
Last summer, Israel’s religious authorities issued a ruling that raised doubts about her conversion to Judaism. But after her father was elected president, they have changed their tune, raising eyebrows among activists who have long lobbied the rabbinical establishment to be more tolerant toward converts.
President Donald Trump’s daughter converted to Judaism under a prominent Orthodox rabbi in Manhattan before her 2009 marriage to Jared Kushner, an observant Jew.
In its ruling last July, an Israeli government religious court rejected the legitimacy of another conversion by the same rabbi. Although it didn’t directly affect Ivanka Trump, it raised questions as to whether Israel’s powerful religious establishment would recognize her as being Jewish.
But in early December, just weeks after Trump’s election victory, Israel’s chief rabbis said they would work to change the rules for recognizing conversions performed abroad--and they singled out Ivanka Trump.
“According to the new proposed plan ... her conversion will be certified without the need for additional checks,” the announcement said.
Israeli activists say the sudden policy change appears to be an attempt to curry favor with the new U.S. president. Ivanka Trump’s husband has been appointed a senior adviser to Trump and is expected to focus on Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts.
An Israeli rabbinic committee has already met several times to discuss conversion policy, a speedier pace than usual, activists say.
“The timing is certainly suspicious,” said Rabbi Seth Farber, director of ITIM, an organization that represents converts seeking recognition from the rabbinate. “My biggest fear is that the rabbinate will find some way to find Ms. Trump kosher, to recognize her conversion, but leave thousands of other converts behind, simply saying they’re not Jewish enough for us.”
Since Ivanka Trump does not live in Israel, for her the issue is largely hypothetical. But for converts in Israel, the rabbinate’s ruling affects their daily lives. If they are not recognized as Jewish, they are not permitted to marry in Israel, and they are technically ineligible for a religious burial when they die.
Israel’s Orthodox establishment does not recognize conversions performed by the more liberal Reform and Conservative streams of Judaism, to which most American Jews belong. But immigration officials have more relaxed guidelines and do allow Reform and Conservative converts to gain citizenship in Israel as Jews.
These days, many Israelis simply wave off the rabbinate as irrelevant. Secular Israelis often wed in civil ceremonies abroad to avoid the rabbinate, while many ultra-Orthodox Jews dismiss the rabbinate’s certification of kosher food as too lax. Some Israelis perceive the rabbinate as corrupt: A former Israeli chief rabbi was sentenced to three and a half years in prison this week following charges of corruption and bribery.
“The rabbinate is a fossil of an institution that does not succeed in grappling with modern needs,” said Nahum Barnea, a leading Israeli columnist. “Most Israelis see the recognition of Ivanka Trump’s Judaism, or lack of recognition, as a joke.”
Under the proposed reform, the rabbinate would establish clear guidelines for which rabbis abroad are deemed fit to perform conversions, rather than the current practice of evaluating each individual convert.
All foreign-born Jews seeking a marriage license in Israel must first be checked by the rabbinate to ensure they are indeed Jewish. Between 2013 and 2015, some 5,000 people asked the rabbinate to recognize them as Jews, according to rabbinate figures.
Critics say Israeli rabbinical courts reject dozens of converts each year, claiming their Orthodox conversions were not stringent enough and in some case questioning their motives and levels of observance.
The issue reached a boiling point last year when an Israeli rabbinical court refused to recognize the conversion of a 31-year-old American, Nicole Zeitler.
While working in New York, she converted to Judaism after a year and a half of study that included Hebrew lessons, a weekly questionnaire on Jewish topics and twice-a-week meetings with Rabbi Haskel Lookstein, a senior rabbi in the U.S. Orthodox community who also oversaw Ivanka Trump’s conversion.
“It was intense. I learned it and I lived it,” Zeitler said.
She moved to Israel and became engaged to an Israeli, but a rabbinical court would not grant her a marriage license, dismissing Lookstein’s credentials.
The move created an uproar in Israel, with the speaker of the Israeli parliament and head of Israel’s Labor party, who know Lookstein personally, petitioning the rabbinate to reconsider. In the end, the supreme rabbinical court persuaded Zeitler to undergo a quickened conversion by reciting a special declaration of faith, rather than recognize Lookstein’s conversion.
“The Israeli rabbinic establishment is an ultra-conservative establishment. Rabbi Lookstein is considered a more open-minded Orthodox rabbi,” Farber said. “It rubs some of the rabbinical authorities the wrong way.” Lookstein declined comment and deferred to Farber to speak on his behalf.
As for Zeitler, she acknowledged it was “a little fishy” that the rabbis were suddenly interested in changing the rules on conversions.
“On the other hand, I’m happy that Trump is president, and that this may change things in the system,” she said, speaking from her small apartment in the central Israeli city of Petah Tikva, where she lives with her husband. “I mean, isn’t this how things happen in the world anyway? Someone super famous and important has to come up and, in this case, be Jewish, to make a big change?”
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this bit was very important to me
#posting this late but oh well#joker out#jan petah#nace jordan#kris guštin#kris gustin#jure maček#jure macek
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MUCH to think about in this picture!!!
first of all, nace buddy, there is NO need for your face to be looking like THAT when your bestie is giving you a hug and second of all... her...
she's seen too much
#ask#ahshsjsksk thank you for this#they're so cute i cant put up with them 💘💘💘💘#jan petah#nace jordan#jance
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orignally i thought the LGBTQ lyric was a little clunky and awkward lyrically even though i appreciated how important it was for a slovenian band to sing
now i think it's genius. it's a masterpiece. it's modern art, actually.
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jan was complaining about it being too scratchy when nace was eating him out, only explaination i can come up with. send post goodnight.
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I’m in a “gotta ask whole JO tumblr” mood, so quick Jance questions;
How did their families find out about the relationship? Was it good?
Who’s gonna cause the most chaos during their wedding?
Where would they go on their honeymoon and why did you pick that place?
omg omg this is so cute and fun, thank you so much!!
How do their families find out about their relationship:
I don't know much at all about their families but for the sake of fanfiction-ifying them, I think Jan would be the kind of guy who doesn't necessarily 'come out' to his friends or family, he just lets them figure it out or only brings it up if it's relevent to the conversation, and the same goes with his relationships. Like, his family will ask him to dinner and he'll be like "oh, and can I bring my boyfriend with me?" and they'll sigh and say yeah sure because they've given up with keeping up with the stuff Jan just doesn't tell them about his life (and they are VERY pleasantly surprised when Nace shows up to the dinner!) But Nace is very different, he'll have to go out of his way to tell each member of the family that he's seeing someone privately because he'd worry how they'd react (they'd all react fine though because how can you not love Jan? and becauae I dont like to imagine the sad scenario)
Who's gonna cause the most chaos during their wedding?
The other three. Nace and Jan themselves are gonna be fine during their wedding (Jan might he running late though – the boys might have to pull that trick from 'Four Weddings & A Funeral' and set all the clocks in his house several hours earlier so he arrieves on time), but their annoying bandmates are gonna be the ones who cause the mayhem. If they're not sobbing in the crowd they're gonna pull a 'Love Actually' and surprise them with a mini performance before they walk down the aisle (Bojan's idea, probably). At the reception, however? Jan is gonna be so messy and chaotic and Nace will probably let himself drink that night so he's gonna get super messy too... so both of them, really.
Where would they go on their honeymoon?
Somewhere like Bordaeux or Provence in France, or Tuscany or Sicily in Italy, partly because they're beautiful places and also partly because they're famous for their wines and Jan once said that his ideal date would include a glass of red wine (and, again, I think Nace would let himself enjoy some nice expensive wine on his honeymoon).
THIS WAS VERY FUN THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS ASK!!! 💕💕💕
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